Test & Measurement
National Instruments Measurement Studio 8.6 Offers Complete Support for Visual Studio 2008
National Instruments has announced Measurement Studio 8.6, which increases test and measurement functionality for Visual Studio 2008, the latest Microsoft development environment. Measurement Studio 8.6 features the industry’s first complete set of .NET and C++ class libraries, tools and data acquisition and instrument control driver support for Microsoft Visual Studio 2008, Microsoft Foundation Class Library (MFC) 9.0 and the .NET Framework 3.5. Engineers using .NET can also use Measurement Studio 8.6 to support applications with select modular instruments by building benchmark applications in Visual Studio 2008.
MeasWith Measurement Studio 8.6, .NET developers have the added advantage of the Technical Data Management Streaming (TDMS) .NET API that provides an efficient method to describe and store measurement data that is optimised for high-speed data streaming and postprocessing. With the TDMS file format, engineers can easily store properties and organise data hierarchically within a test file and quickly capture, display and stream several channels of data from devices. The TDMS data model removes the burden of designing and maintaining custom file formats, and these files can also be accessed and modified easily in Visual Studio with Measurement Studio or in other analysis environments such as NI LabVIEW, LabWindows/CVI and DIAdem or in spreadsheet environments such as Microsoft Excel.
“In the past, we spent a lengthy, costly amount of time at a research centre processing data after it was collected,” said Larry Roy, Vice President of Embedded Logix Inc. “Using the Measurement Studio .NET class libraries with TDMS file support to store our complex data, we can easily perform data analysis within minutes of running a trial. We went from a concept to a working prototype in less than one month.”
Measurement Studio works with NI data acquisition (DAQ) hardware such as NI USB DAQ, Wi-Fi DAQ, Ethernet-based and PCI Express devices by providing a high-level interface for data acquisition applications. Engineers can take advantage of built-in channel configurations for scaling raw data, high-speed waveform acquisition and generation and accurate single-point analogue and digital I/O. They can also use pulse generation, event counting and duration measurements with a counter/timer I/O in Measurement Studio 8.6. These I/O capabilities, combined with special data types and measurement analysis class libraries, are specifically designed to obtain the data or measurement needed from physical sensors efficiently.